患者安全文化与卫生保健工作者的直言不讳

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q2 NURSING Asian Nursing Research Pub Date : 2023-02-01 DOI:10.1016/j.anr.2023.01.001
Seung Eun Lee , V. Susan Dahinten , Ja-Kyung Seo , InYoung Park , Mi Young Lee , Hye Sung Han
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引用次数: 2

摘要

目的尽管先前的研究表明了安全文化对医护人员发声行为的重要性,但尚不清楚特定的安全文化领域与医院工作人员的发声行为有何关联。此外,研究人员表示,医护人员的发声行为因职业而异,但对这种差异的研究有限。因此,本研究考察了医护人员对患者安全文化的认知差异以及职业上的促进性和禁止性发声行为,并调查了患者安全文化与这两种发声行为之间的关系。方法采用二次数据进行描述性相关研究,二次数据是通过对韩国一家私立、非营利、三级教学医院的医护人员的在线调查收集的。样本(N=831)由护士(54.0%)、医生(13.0%)和其他有执照和无执照的医院人员(33.0%)组成。进行方差分析以检验不同职业的研究变量的差异。在对任期和职业进行控制后,采用层次回归分析来评估七个患者安全文化因素对晋升和禁止性话语的影响。结果与护士相比,医生对安全文化和促进性话语行为的认知程度更高。沟通开放性、报告患者不良事件以及单位主管和医院管理层对患者安全的支持是这两种声音行为的重要预测因素。结论医院管理者和单位管理者应创造一个支持性的环境,让员工可以自由地表达他们的担忧和建议。他们还应该关注不同群体的医院工作人员持有的不同观点以及他们不同的声音行为。了解患者安全文化的哪些维度与卫生保健工作者的声音行为最密切相关,可以指导卫生保健组织中的患者安全改进活动。
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Patient Safety Culture and Speaking Up Among Health Care Workers

Purpose

Although previous research showed the importance of safety culture on health care workers' speaking up behaviors, it is not clear how particular safety culture domains are associated with the speaking up behaviors of hospital staff. Also, researchers have suggested that health care workers’ speaking up behaviors vary by profession, but there has been limited research into such differences. Thus, this study examined differences in perceptions of patient safety culture and the promotive and prohibitive speaking up behaviors of health care workers by profession and investigated the relationships between patient safety culture and the two types of speaking up behaviors.

Methods

A descriptive correlational study was conducted using secondary data collected through an online survey of health care workers at a private, nonprofit, tertiary-level teaching hospital in South Korea. The sample (N = 831) consisted of nurses (54.0%), physicians (13.0%), and other licensed and unlicensed hospital personnel (33.0%). Analyses of variance were conducted to examine differences in study variables by profession. Hierarchical regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the effects of the seven patient safety culture factors on promotive and prohibitive voice after controlling for tenure and profession.

Results

Perceptions of safety culture and promotive voice behaviors were higher for physicians compared with nurses. Communication openness, reporting patient adverse events, and unit supervisors' and hospital managements’ support for patient safety were significant predictors of both types of voice behaviors.

Conclusion

Hospital administrators and unit managers should create a supportive environment where staff feel free to voice their concerns and suggestions. They should also pay attention to the varying perspectives held by different groups of hospital workers and their different voice behaviors. Knowing which dimensions of patient safety culture are most strongly related to health care workers’ voice behaviors can guide patient safety improvement activities in health care organizations.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.50%
发文量
32
审稿时长
45 days
期刊介绍: Asian Nursing Research is the official peer-reviewed research journal of the Korean Society of Nursing Science, and is devoted to publication of a wide range of research that will contribute to the body of nursing science and inform the practice of nursing, nursing education, administration, and history, on health issues relevant to nursing, and on the testing of research findings in practice.
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